101 Gins to Try Before You Die
By Ian Buxton
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About this ebook
From Adnams to Zuidam, Beefeater to Bombay, and London to Plymouth (and beyond), this new book from a bestselling drinks writer is the authoritative guide to the world of gin and the first book to explore the explosion of innovative gin brands and the artisanal distillers that are reinventing this most English of drinks.
With serious gin bars stocking well over three hundred brands and adding still more, how do you choose? Is Edinburgh Gin a style or just a brand name? Can a rose-flower and cucumber infusion properly be called gin? Can gin be aged in wood or does that just make it a strange-tasting young whiskey? And what tonic to choose and why? In his inimitable style, Ian Buxton will lead readers through the great gin trap with his latest no-nonsense guide to 101 gins.
Ian Buxton
Ian Buxton has been working in and around the drinks industry for 30 years but has been drinking professionally for a good deal longer. He writes in a variety of trade and consumer titles in the UK and abroad.
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101 Gins to Try Before You Die - Ian Buxton
INTRODUCTION
We’re in the middle of a new Gin Craze. From being the drink of choice of middle-aged, Jaguar-driving golfers and an easy target for stand-up comedians, today it’s harder to find anything hipper on the international bar scene.
This is by way of an exploration. I want to see how Madam Geneva, scourge of the drinking classes and emblematic of wantonness, sin and ruin, has evolved into the most fashionable of spirits. How a drink reeking of suburbia, Home Counties complacency and golf-club lounges is now found in cutting-edge cocktail bars around the world. And how what you might once have described as the Nigel Farage of drinks has morphed into its Cara Delevingne. (Disclaimer: I have no idea what the divine Cara drinks. We move in different circles, and for all I know she’s tucked up in bed well before News at Ten with a tasty glass of organic green tea – the point, as I’m sure you’ve gathered, is that gin is hot.)1
Rowlandson and, famously, Hogarth placed gin at the heart of much of their work. Commentators too, such as Defoe, Fielding, Dickens and many others, had much to say about it, not to mention those eighteenth-century politicians who legislated with such enthusiasm (and such a lack of noticeable effect) to curb the English taste for gin.
Or should that be Dutch? They gave the world ‘genever’ which the English made their own, leading rapidly to London’s original (and infamous) Gin Craze. It may have taken more than 250 years, but gin has now shaken off its reputation for debauchery and ruin to take its place as one of the hottest of world spirits.
So, from Adnams to Xoriguer (couldn’t find a Z I liked; you’ll see) and London to Plymouth (and beyond) I want to explore this incredible explosion of innovative gin brands and the new generation of young and enthusiastic distillers that are reinventing this most English of drinks.
Not that a hint of debauchery and ruin does its image any harm. But today it’s all very confusing. Scarcely a day goes by without an established brand offering a fresh take on their established styles or, more likely, a new boutique distillery opening its doors – where gin is de rigueur. However, before we dive into that particular madness a little bit of history is probably called for.
A LITTLE BIT OF HISTORY
According to the Middlesex magistrates, gin was ‘the principal cause of all the vice and debauchery committed among the inferior sort of people’. Clearly those gentlemen took a robust and not very politically correct view of those making an involuntary and no doubt unwelcome visit to their court back in 1721 . . .
So things were pretty over-excited in Georgian England, which for most of the early eighteenth century was in the grip of a binge-drinking frenzy we’ve come to know as the Gin Craze. Daniel Defoe put up a pretty robust defence of the industry though:
As to the excesses and intemperances of the People, and their drinking immoderate Quantities of Malt Spirits, the Distillers are not concern’d in it at all; their Business is to prepare a Spirit wholesome and good. If the People will destroy themselves by their own Excesses, and make that Poison, which is otherwise an Antidote; ’tis the Magistrates’ Business to help that, not the Distillers. (The Case of the Distillers, London, 1726)
Mind you, he’d been well paid for that piece of enthusiastic spin-doctoring and was as liable to take the side of the moral majority as defend the distilling industry which, incidentally and apart from some pious sermonising about ‘using our products responsibly’, hasn’t to this day got much further than ‘don’t blame us if people get off their face on our products’.
You could quite reasonably argue that alcopops and cheap cider are today’s equivalent of gin, though as far as I know, no one is yet selling these one shot at a time through a ‘Puss and Mew’ vending machine. Give them time, though, give them time.
Gin’s history begins . . . well, no one can quite agree. According to some commentators, not least the ever reliable Wikipedia (so it must be true), the Dutch physician Franciscus Sylvius is to be credited with the invention of gin in the mid-seventeenth century.
But ‘Dutch Courage’ can be dated to 1585 when English troops supported the Dutch army in their war with the Spanish, and there are written references to ‘genever’ as early as the thirteenth century.
I’m not convinced that it matters. Various nations make various claims for the ancient origins of their national drink; the Scots date whisky to 1494, the Poles claim 1174 for vodka, and the French place Armagnac ahead of cognac with references to 1411. So the English were late to the game with gin, probably sometime in the early seventeenth century. The Worshipful Company of Distillers, Defoe’s patron, received its royal warrant in 1638, but the first ‘distillers’ were actually surgeons, much to the displeasure of the apothecaries who took exception to these upstarts and objected to the dilution of their jealously guarded privileges.
The first attempts at gin were an effort to replicate the genever enjoyed by English troops during their long campaigns in Holland during the Thirty Years’ War (1618–1648), but it took the arrival of King William III, or William of Orange as he is better known, in the Glorious Revolution of 1688 for gin to raise its game. And raise it, it did, in response to a series of laws aiming to promote distilling in England (and, not entirely coincidentally, the sale of grain – which suited the landed interest then dominant in Parliament very nicely indeed).
Soon sales of gin exceeded that of the more expensive beer; little wonder when anyone could start distilling by giving ten days’ public notice. To the alarm of the genteel and the ruling classes production soared, and in 1729 a licensing system for distillers and publicans was introduced and duty charged. Things got worse: illicitly distilled ‘gin’ prospered at the expense of legitimate traders. Soon it was estimated that in certain parts of London one private house in four was selling some form of spirits. Regionally the situation was little better and an epidemic of alcohol dependency was taking hold of the poorer parts of the nation.
A further attempt at legislation, the Gin Act of September 1736, merely exacerbated the situation by attempting to restrict retailers and greatly raise the retail price. Though opposed by, among others, the Prime Minister (Sir Robert Walpole) and Dr Samuel Johnson, the law was passed – and then routinely ignored. Only two of the infamous £50 distilling licences (equivalent to around £750,000 today) were taken out, while production is thought to have increased by around half.
Rioting followed the passing of the Act, though street riots by the mob were not infrequent during this period: 1736 saw the Porteous Riots of April and September in Edinburgh, and in east London in July of that year there were riots against the cheap labour of Irish immigrants. A number of pamphlets arguing for and against the measure were issued, some with extravagant titles such as ‘An Elegy on the much lamented death of the most excellent, the most truly beloved, and universally admired Lady Madam Geneva’. The lady also appeared in a famous print, ‘The Funeral Procession of Madam Geneva’.
Social problems associated with excessive drinking and the public consumption of spirits, such as crime and prostitution, continued, and Parliament, accepting that the 1736 Act was unworkable, returned to the subject in 1742/43. The earlier legislation was abolished and a fairer system of licensing and taxation was introduced, partly following lobbying from the distilling industry. This was further refined in 1747, but the problems remained.
By 1751, the novelist and magistrate Henry Fielding, active in the suppression of the gin trade, attributed to it ‘the late (i.e. recent) increase in robbers’ and may have worked with or influenced his friend William Hogarth whose pair of engravings ‘Gin Lane’ and ‘Beer Street’ dramatically illustrate the scourge of excessive gin drinking in graphic scenes of misery, vice, degradation and death. Hogarth contrasts the squalor resulting from gin consumption with the robust health of the beer drinker, illustrating a street scene where only the pawnbroker’s business appears to be suffering. Moralistic verses by the Revd James Townley appear beneath both images; his poem on gin beginning:
Gin, cursed Fiend, with Fury fraught,
Makes human Race a Prey.
It enters by a deadly Draught
And steals our Life away.
But by 1757 the Gin Craze had subsided. In part this was due to the 1751 legislation which required licensees to trade from premises rented for at least £10 a year and thus tended to favour larger, better-quality producers. Historians also point to population growth, poor harvests and the consequent reduction in wages and higher food prices as contributory factors. Gin production simply became less profitable, and so the trade declined until the next boom in Victorian times with the arrival of the gin palace.
These lavish and alluring premises flourished from the late 1820s and provided a vivid contrast to the squalid dram shops that preceded them. Large, dramatically lit and filled with cut-glass and mirrors, they were originally designed for fast service, where the patron was intended to consume his or her drink standing up and then leave to make way for the next customer. Their influence on pub design was profound and they made a notable impact on the novelist Charles Dickens who describes them at length in the Evening Chronicle of 19 February 1835:
All is light and brilliancy. The hum of many voices issues from that splendid gin-shop which forms the commencement of the two streets opposite; and the gay building with the fantastically ornamented parapet, the illuminated clock, the plate-glass windows surrounded by stucco rosettes, and its profusion of gas-lights in richly gilt burners, is perfectly dazzling when contrasted with the darkness and dirt we have just left. The interior is even gayer than the exterior. A bar of French-polished mahogany, elegantly carved, extends the whole width of the place; and there are two side-aisles of great casks, painted green and gold, enclosed within a light brass rail, and bearing such inscriptions, as ‘Old Tom, 549’; ‘Young Tom, 360’; ‘Samson, 1421’ – the figures agreeing, we presume, with ‘gallons’, understood. Beyond the bar is a lofty and spacious saloon, full of the same enticing vessels, with a gallery running round it, equally well furnished. On the counter, in addition to the usual spirit apparatus, are two or three little baskets of cakes and biscuits, which are carefully secured at top with wicker-work, to prevent their contents being unlawfully abstracted. Behind it, are two showily dressed damsels with large necklaces, dispensing the spirits and ‘compounds’. They are assisted by the ostensible proprietor of the concern, a stout, coarse fellow in a fur cap, put on very much on one side to give him a knowing air, and to display his sandy whiskers to the best advantage.
In his essay, Dickens is highly critical of the prevailing social conditions of the poorer working classes and the unemployed but very well aware of the appeal of the gin palace. He concludes:
Gin-drinking is a great vice in England, but wretchedness and dirt are a greater; and until you improve the homes of the poor, or persuade a half-famished wretch not to seek relief in the temporary oblivion of his own misery, with the pittance which, divided among his family, would furnish a morsel of bread for each, gin-shops will increase in number and splendour.
Later, in The Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit (1844) we meet the sublime Sairey Gamp: ‘The face of Mrs Gamp – the nose in particular – was somewhat red and swollen, and it was difficult to enjoy her society without becoming conscious of a smell of spirits.’ It would be some time before gin threw off the stereotype so vividly called up by Dickens.
However, as British imperial power expanded, to become at its zenith the empire on which the sun never set, the medicinal use of quinine to prevent malaria became more widespread. French scientists had extracted quinine from the bark of the cinchona tree in 1817, but the taste was bitter and unpalatable. Soon though, British officers in India, no doubt imbued with patriotic fervour and keen to support domestic industry while helping their medicine go down, hit on the idea of combining it with soda water, sugar, lime and gin.
Thus, as early as 1825 we see the forerunner of the gin and tonic, and gin beginning to move upmarket. Bottles of sweetened quinine water soon appeared and carbonated tonic water was introduced towards the end of the nineteenth century. Meanwhile Johann Schweppe had founded his eponymous business in Vienna in 1783 (he moved to London nine years later). Regardless of the many new brands of tonic now available, some of them excellent, Schweppes must surely be regarded as the most famous name in tonic and is inextricably linked with gin.
Some of the greatest names in gin date from this period, or just earlier. Greenall’s was founded in 1761, Gordon’s in 1769, and Plymouth in 1793, but with the advent of Tanqueray (1830) and Beefeater (1860s, but building on a firm established some forty years earlier) branding and marketing came to the fore.
Having swept round the British Empire, gin enjoyed its next moment of fame and popularity during the cocktail boom of the Roaring Twenties. Again, it had successfully moved upmarket and was fashionable, acceptable in society and had crossed the Atlantic to conquer America. The advent of Prohibition would not appear to have significantly dented its appeal, with the ‘bathtub gin’ of legend (and all too often, fact) lending it a brittle glamour and racy charm. The lure of the speakeasy and the blandishments of the bootlegger are an uncomfortable echo of England’s Gin Craze.
As late as 1942, Rick (Humphrey Bogart) describes his bar in Casablanca as a ‘gin joint’ – something clandestine, outside the law and carrying the fascination of forbidden fruit.
By the 1950s, however, it had shaken off this raffish clothing and become respectable: now it was something served in golf clubs to the middle-aged and middle-class. Long-established brands began to fail, and old favourites such as Lemon Gin, Orange Gin and Old Tom fell away one by one. Little wonder that within a few short years vodka and white rum would overtake it and gin’s slow decline would accelerate. But, as we will see, that was to be reversed even more recently with the arrival of brands such as Bombay (and Bombay Sapphire) and Hendrick’s.
Which brings us pretty much up to today, where we find an excitement and energy about gin that has not been seen for